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Oxford Law Citator
Contents
Expand All
Collapse All
Preliminary Material
Preface
Overview of Chapters
Table of Cases
United Kingdom
European Union
Othernational Jurisdictions
France
Germany
Italy
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Spain
United States
Table of Legislation
United Kingdom
Statutes
Subordinate Legislation
European Union Legislation
Treaties
Brexit-relatedAgreements
Directives
Regulations
Commission Delegated Directives
Commission Delegated Regulations
Other National Legislation
Australia
France
Germany
Italy
Japan
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Spain
United States
List of Contributors
List of Abbreviations
Main Text
Part I General Aspects
1 Introduction
Preliminary Material
I The Capital Markets Union Action Plan
1.01
II Brexit
1.02
III The New EU Prospectus Regime
1.03
1.04
1.05
1.06
1.07
1.08
1.09
1.10
1.11
1.12
IV Structure of the Book
1.13
1 General Aspects
1.14
1.15
1.16
1.17
2 The New EU Prospectus Rules
1.18
1.19
1.20
1.21
1.22
1.23
1.24
1.25
1.26
1.27
1.28
1.29
3 Prospectus Liability and Litigation
1.30
1.31
1.32
1.33
1.34
1.35
1.36
1.37
1.38
2 The IPO Process, IPO Disclosure, and the Prospectus Regulation
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
2.01
2.02
2.03
2.04
2.05
2.06
2.07
II Key IPO Considerations
1 Reasons for an IPO
2.08
2.09
2.10
2.11
2 Preparing for an IPO
(i) IPO readiness
2.12
2.13
2.14
2.15
2.16
2.17
3 Execution of the IPO and Disclosure
2.18
2.19
2.20
2.21
2.22
(i) Management presentation
2.23
(ii) Early-look and pilot fishing meeting
2.24
(iii) Analyst presentation and research reports
2.25
2.26
2.27
2.28
2.29
(iv) Due diligence
2.30
2.31
2.32
2.33
2.34
2.35
2.36
2.37
2.38
III The IPO Prospectus
2.39
1 Drafting the Prospectus
2.40
2.41
2.42
2.43
2.44
2 Drafting Sessions
2.45
3 Review and Approval of the IPO Prospectus
2.46
4 Format of the IPO Prospectus
2.47
5 Review Period
2.48
2.49
2.50
6 Publication and Reading Time
2.51
2.52
7 Exemptions
2.53
2.54
2.55
2.56
2.57
(i) Completing the IPO—some final disclosure considerations
2.58
2.59
2.60
2.61
IV IPO Prospectuses and the Prospectus Regulation
1 Introduction
2.62
2 Risk Factors
2.63
2.64
(i) Implications of changes for IPOs
2.65
2.66
3 Use of Proceeds
2.67
2.68
(i) Implications of changes for IPOs
2.69
4 Summary in the IPO Prospectus
2.70
(i) Implications of changes for IPOs
2.71
5 Profit Forecasts and Profit Estimates
2.72
(i) Implications of changes for IPOs
2.73
V Concluding Remarks
2.74
2.75
2.76
3 Stabilization and Underpricing in IPOs
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
3.01
3.02
3.03
II The Economics of IPOs
3.04
1 The Structure of the IPO
3.05
3.06
2 IPOs and Underpricing
3.07
3.08
3.09
3 Overpricing and Theories of Stabilization
3.10
III The US Regulatory Regime
3.11
3.12
3.13
3.14
3.15
3.16
IV The European Regulatory Regime
1 Insider Trading and Market Manipulation
3.17
3.18
3.19
3.20
2 The Notion and the Purpose of Stabilization
3.21
3.22
3.23
3.24
3.25
3.26
3 The Notion of Ancillary Stabilization
3.27
4 The Notion of Overallotment Facility and of Allotment
3.28
3.29
3.30
3.31
3.32
5 The Notion of Greenshoe Option
3.33
6 The Substantive Rules for Stabilization: The Stabilization Period
3.34
3.35
3.36
3.37
3.38
3.39
3.40
3.41
7 The Substantive Rules for Stabilization: The Price Conditions
3.42
8 The Substantive Rules for Ancillary Stabilization
3.43
9 The Disclosure Regime for Stabilization
3.44
3.45
3.46
3.47
3.48
3.49
3.50
10 Insider Trading and Stabilization
3.51
3.52
3.53
V Conclusion
3.54
3.55
4 The Prospectus Regulation and Other EU Legislation: The Wider Context for Prospectuses
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
4.01
4.02
4.03
4.04
4.05
II References in the Prospectus Regulation to Other EU Laws and their Legal Implications
4.06
1 Securities
4.07
4.08
4.09
4.10
4.11
4.12
4.13
2 Bail-innable Securities
4.14
4.15
4.16
3 ‘Qualified Investors’
4.17
4.18
4.19
4.20
4 Regulated Markets
4.21
4.22
4.23
4.24
5 Home Member State
4.25
4.26
4.27
6 PRIIPs
4.28
4.29
4.30
III Contents of Prospectuses beyond the Prospectus Regulation
4.31
1 MiFID II and MiFIR
4.32
4.33
4.34
4.35
4.36
4.37
4.38
2 Transparency on Financial Reporting and Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
4.39
4.40
4.41
4.42
4.43
4.44
3 The Market Abuse Regulation
4.45
4.46
4.47
4.48
4 The Benchmarks Regulation
4.49
4.50
4.51
4.52
4.53
4.54
4.55
5 The Credit Rating Agencies Regulation
4.56
4.57
4.58
6 The Securitization Regulation
4.59
4.60
4.61
4.62
7 The Take-over Bid Directive
4.63
4.64
4.65
4.66
8 Prospectuses for Financial Sector Issuers
(i) CRD/CRR: regulatory capital
4.67
4.68
4.69
(ii) Asset-backed securities: from STS to ECB eligibility criteria and guiding principles
4.70
4.71
4.72
4.73
(iii) BRRD: bail-in
4.74
4.75
4.76
4.77
IV Prospectuses in the Context of Brexit Legislation
4.78
1 The EU Approach
4.79
4.80
2 The UK Approach
4.81
4.82
4.83
V Conclusion
4.84
4.85
4.86
5 The Disclosure Paradigm: Conventional Understandings and Modern Divergences
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
5.01
5.02
5.03
5.04
5.05
5.06
5.07
5.08
5.09
II The Disclosure Paradigm: Conventional Understandings
1 Overview
5.10
5.11
5.12
2 The SEC’s Basic Approach to Information: The ‘Descriptive Mode’ and ‘Intermediary Depictions’
5.13
5.14
5.15
5.16
5.17
5.18
III The Impact of Financial Innovation on Conventional Understandings
1 Complexity and the Need for a Portfolio of Modes of Information
(i) The limitations of the descriptive mode
5.19
5.20
5.21
5.22
5.23
5.24
5.25
(ii) The ‘transfer mode’, the ‘hybrid mode’, and the portfolio approach to information
5.26
5.27
5.28
5.29
5.30
5.31
5.32
5.33
5.34
(iii) Asset-backed securities and pure information: loan-level data and downloadable waterfall codes
5.35
5.36
5.37
5.38
5.39
5.40
5.41
5.42
5.43
5.44
5.45
(iv) Alternative data: the portfolio approach and original third-party company-specific information
5.46
5.47
5.48
5.49
5.50
5.51
5.52
2 The Exchange-Traded Fund: A Traded Security without Disclosure’s Heart and Soul
5.53
5.54
5.55
5.56
5.57
5.58
5.59
5.60
5.61
3 Decoupling and New Extra-Company Informational Asymmetries
(i) Overview
5.62
5.63
5.64
5.65
5.66
(ii) Credit default swaps and the empty creditor with negative economic exposure issue
5.67
5.68
5.69
5.70
5.71
5.72
5.73
5.74
5.75
5.76
5.77
IV The Regulatory Ends of Disclosure and the Emergence of a Parallel Disclosure Universe
1 Changing Regulatory Ends and the SEC
5.78
5.79
5.80
5.81
5.82
5.83
5.84
5.85
5.86
2 Systemic Risk: The SEC and the New Bank Regulator Disclosure Universe
(i) The global financial crisis, the SEC, and the call for a change in the SEC’s statutory mandate
5.87
5.88
5.89
5.90
5.91
5.92
5.93
5.94
5.95
5.96
(ii) The bank regulator public disclosure system
5.97
5.98
5.99
5.100
5.101
5.102
5.103
5.104
5.105
5.106
5.107
5.108
5.109
V Conclusion
5.110
Part II The New EU Prospectus Rules
6 Transferable Securities and the Scope of the Prospectus Regulation: The Case of ICOs
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
6.01
6.02
6.03
II Financial Instruments and Transferable Securities in MiFID II
6.04
6.05
6.06
6.07
6.08
6.09
6.10
III Transferable Securities in the Prospectus Regulation
6.11
6.12
6.13
IV The Rise of ICOs
1 Legal Issues
6.14
6.15
6.16
2 Token Categories
6.17
6.18
6.19
6.20
V ICOs and US Securities Regulation
6.21
6.22
6.23
6.24
VI ICOs and EU Securities Regulation
1 Current Approaches
6.25
6.26
6.27
6.28
6.29
2 Risk-Based Approach
6.30
6.31
6.32
6.33
6.34
6.35
6.36
3 Purposive Techniques
6.37
6.38
6.39
6.40
VII Conclusions
6.41
6.42
6.43
7 The Obligation to Publish a Prospectus and Exemptions
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
7.01
7.02
7.03
7.04
II Trigger No. 1: An Offer of Securities to the Public
7.05
7.06
7.07
7.08
7.09
7.10
7.11
III Trigger No. 2: An Admittance to Trading on a Regulated Market
7.12
7.13
7.14
7.15
IV The Geographical Demarcation
7.16
7.17
V Exemptions to the Obligation to Publish a Prospectus—General Comments
7.18
7.19
VI Exemption Type No. 1: The Type of Security
7.20
7.21
7.22
7.23
7.24
VII Exemption Type No. 2: Small Offerings
7.25
7.26
7.27
VIII Exemption Type No. 3: Exemptions Specific to an Offer to the Public
7.28
7.29
7.30
7.31
7.32
7.33
7.34
7.35
7.36
7.37
IX Exemption Type No. 4: Exemptions Specific to an Admittance to Trading on a Regulated Market
7.38
7.39
7.40
7.41
7.42
7.43
7.44
7.45
7.46
X Combination of Exemptions
7.47
XI A Voluntary Prospectus
7.48
7.49
XII The Prospectus Requirement for Investment Institutions (as a Special Type of Issuer)
7.50
7.51
7.52
7.53
7.54
XIII Subsequent Resale if an Exemption Has Been Used
7.55
7.56
7.57
XIV Conclusion
7.58
8 The Contents of the Prospectus: Rules for Financial Information
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
8.01
8.02
8.03
8.04
8.05
8.06
8.07
II The Legal Background: Prospectus Regulation, Delegated Regulation, ESMA Recommendations, and Q&A
8.08
8.09
8.10
8.11
8.12
8.13
III Historical Financial Information
1 Annual and Interim Financial Reports to be Included in the Prospectus
8.14
8.15
8.16
8.17
8.18
8.19
8.20
2 Accounting Standards
8.21
8.22
3 The Change of Accounting Framework and the Impact of IAS 8 on Historical Financial Information
8.23
8.24
8.25
8.26
8.27
4 Incorporation by Reference
8.28
8.29
5 The Alignment of the Operating and Financial Review Requirement with the Management Reports Required under the Accounting Directive
8.30
8.31
6 The Removal of the Requirement for Issuers of Equity and Retail Non-Equity to Include Selected Financial Information in the Prospectus
8.32
8.33
IV Pro Forma Financial Information
8.34
8.35
1 Issuers Required to Provide Additional Financial Information
8.36
8.37
8.38
8.39
8.40
8.41
2 The Additional Information Relating to an Entity Other than the Issuer
8.42
8.43
8.44
8.45
8.46
8.47
8.48
8.49
3 Preparation and Presentation of Pro Forma Financial Information
8.50
8.51
8.52
8.53
8.54
8.55
8.56
8.57
4 Pro Forma Adjustments to Historical Accounting
8.58
8.59
8.60
8.61
8.62
5 Audit Requirement
8.63
V Profit Forecasts and Profit Estimates
8.64
1 The Relevance of Profit Forecast and Profit Estimates: Equity vs Non-Equity Issuance
8.65
8.66
8.67
2 Definition
8.68
8.69
8.70
8.71
8.72
8.73
3 Disclosure Requirements
8.74
8.75
8.76
8.77
4 The Deletion of Audit Requirements on Profit Forecasts and Estimates
8.78
8.79
8.80
8.81
8.82
8.83
8.84
VI Conclusions
8.85
8.86
9 The Contents of the Prospectus: Non-Financial Information and Materiality
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
9.01
9.02
II Principal Rule
9.03
9.04
9.05
III Objective versus Subjective Materiality
9.06
9.07
9.08
9.09
IV The Scope of Article 6(1), Prospectus Regulation
9.10
9.11
9.12
V The Materiality Test Generally
9.13
VI Materiality in the Context of Prospectus Liability
9.14
9.15
9.16
9.17
VII ‘Materiality’ not Defined in the Prospectus Regulation or in Delegated Regulations
9.18
9.19
9.20
9.21
VIII The Average Investor
9.22
9.23
9.24
IX Materiality in the Context of the Prospectus Summary
9.25
X Materiality in Relation to Risk Factors
9.26
9.27
9.28
9.29
XI Materiality Thresholds as Applied by External Auditors
9.30
9.31
XII Materiality as a Concept in Various Jurisdictions: A High-Level Overview
9.32
1 The Netherlands
9.33
2 The US
9.34
9.35
3 Germany
9.36
9.37
9.38
XIII Accommodating Funding Needs
9.39
9.40
9.41
XIV Possibilities for Omitting Sensitive Information
9.42
9.43
9.44
9.45
9.46
9.47
9.48
9.49
9.50
9.51
9.52
XV Exculpations
9.53
9.54
9.55
9.56
9.57
9.58
9.59
9.60
9.61
XVI Applicable Law and Jurisdiction
9.62
9.63
9.64
9.65
9.66
9.67
9.68
9.69
9.70
9.71
XVII Concluding Remarks
9.72
9.73
9.74
9.75
10 ‘Light’ Disclosure Regimes: The EU Growth Prospectus
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
10.01
10.02
10.03
10.04
10.05
10.06
II The Problems of SME Market-Based Finance
10.07
10.08
10.09
10.10
10.11
III The EU Growth Prospectus
10.12
10.13
1 The Logic of the EU Growth Prospectus Regulation
10.14
10.15
10.16
2 The Perimeter of Regime
10.17
10.18
10.19
3 The Content of the EU Growth Prospectus
10.20
10.21
10.22
10.23
10.24
10.25
IV A Critical Evaluation
10.26
10.27
10.28
10.29
10.30
V An Alternative View
10.31
10.32
10.33
10.34
VI Conclusion
10.35
11 ‘Light’ Disclosure Regimes: Secondary Issuances
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
11.01
II Background
1 The Capital Markets Union
11.02
11.03
11.04
11.05
11.06
2 The Prospectus Directive Review Consultation
11.07
11.08
11.09
III The Case for a Light Disclosure Regime for Secondary Offerings or Listings
1 Introduction
11.10
11.11
2 The Transparency Directive
11.12
11.13
3 The Market Abuse Regulation
11.14
4 Options for a Light Disclosure Regime
11.15
11.16
11.17
11.18
11.19
11.20
11.21
11.22
11.23
11.24
IV Scope
1 Introduction
11.25
2 Secondary Issuances: What are These, and by Whom?
11.26
11.27
3 Offers or Admissions of What Securities? The Same? Same Class? Fungible?
11.28
11.29
11.30
11.31
11.32
11.33
11.34
11.35
11.36
11.37
11.38
V Content—What Information is not Specifically Prescribed?
1 Level 1 Text
11.39
11.40
11.41
11.42
11.43
11.44
2 Level 2: Commission Delegated Regulation and ESMA Advice
11.45
11.46
(i) Equity registration document
11.47
11.48
11.49
11.50
11.51
11.52
11.53
(ii) Debt registration document
11.54
(iii) Equity securities note
11.55
(iv) Debt securities note
11.56
3 Conclusion on Content
11.57
VI Conclusion: Use in Practice?
11.58
11.59
11.60
12 The Summary and Risk Factors
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
12.01
12.02
12.03
II Purpose of the Summary and Risk Factors
12.04
12.05
1 Purpose of the Summary
12.06
12.07
2 Purpose of the Risk Factors
12.08
III The Summary and Risk Factors in the Single-Document Prospectus
1 The Summary
(i) General requirements for the summary
12.09
12.10
12.11
(ii) Prescribed format of the summary
12.12
12.13
12.14
(iii) Risk factors included in the summary
12.15
(iv) Key financial information regarding the issuer and guarantor
12.16
12.17
12.18
12.19
12.20
(v) Relationship with PRIIPs regulation
12.21
12.22
12.23
12.24
12.25
12.26
(vi) Length of the summary
12.27
12.28
12.29
12.30
12.31
12.32
2 The Risk Factors
12.33
12.34
12.35
12.36
12.37
12.38
12.39
12.40
12.41
12.42
12.43
IV The Summary and Risk Factors in Other Prospectus Types
1 Non-Retail, Non-Equity Prospectus
12.44
12.45
12.46
12.47
2 Base Prospectus
12.48
12.49
12.50
12.51
12.52
12.53
12.54
12.55
3 Prospectus Consisting of Separate Documents
12.56
12.57
12.58
4 Universal Registration Document
12.59
12.60
12.61
12.62
5 Simplified Disclosure Regime for Secondary Issuances
12.63
12.64
6 EU Growth Prospectus
12.65
12.66
12.67
12.68
12.69
12.70
V Competent Authority’s Discretionary Powers
12.71
12.72
12.73
12.74
VI Responsibility for the Summary
12.75
12.76
VII Use of Language
12.77
12.78
12.79
12.80
VIII Conclusion
12.81
12.82
12.83
13 Prospectus Formats and Shelf Registration
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
13.01
13.02
II New Regulation and Delegated Acts
13.03
13.04
13.05
13.06
III Prospectus Formats and their Use in Practice
1 Overview
13.07
13.08
2 Stand-alone Prospectuses
13.09
13.10
3 Tri-Partite Prospectuses and the ‘Old’ Shelf Registration
13.11
13.12
13.13
13.14
4 Base Prospectuses and Final Terms/Supplements
13.15
13.16
5 New Summary Requirements
13.17
IV New Prospectus Formats
13.18
1 Simplified Prospectus for Secondary Issuances
13.19
13.20
13.21
13.22
2 Introduction of the EU Growth Prospectus
13.23
13.24
13.25
13.26
13.27
13.28
13.29
3 The New Universal Registration Document (URD)
(i) Overview
13.30
(ii) ‘Well-known’ issuers
13.31
13.32
13.33
13.34
(iii) Approval process and passporting
13.35
13.36
13.37
13.38
13.39
13.40
13.41
(iv) Amendments to URDs
13.42
(a) Amendments to URDs where the URD is not in use as a constituent part of a prospectus
13.43
13.44
13.45
13.46
13.47
(b) Where the URD is in use as a constituent part of a prospectus
13.48
13.49
13.50
(v) URD and other registration documents and annual reports
13.51
13.52
13.53
(vi) Content of the URD
13.54
13.55
13.56
(vii) URD and incorporation by reference
13.57
13.58
13.59
13.60
13.61
V Discussion of URD and Simplified Prospectus
13.62
13.63
13.64
13.65
13.66
VI US Shelf Registration
1 Overview and Evolution
13.67
13.68
13.69
13.70
13.71
13.72
13.73
13.74
13.75
2 Timing of Filings in US Practice
13.76
13.77
3 Comparison with URD
13.78
13.79
VII Conclusion
13.80
13.81
14 The New Advertisement RegimeWhat a Difference a Word Makes?
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
14.01
14.02
II Background
14.03
14.04
14.05
14.06
14.07
III The Prospectus Regulation
1 General
14.08
14.09
14.10
2 From ‘Announcement’ to ‘Communication’
14.11
14.12
14.13
14.14
14.15
14.16
14.17
14.18
14.19
3 Level 1 Requirements to Advertisements
14.20
IV The Delegated Regulation
14.21
14.22
1 Identification of (and Reference to) the Prospectus in any Advertisement
14.23
14.24
14.25
14.26
14.27
14.28
2 Specific Content to be Included in any Advertisement (Retail Only)
14.29
14.30
14.31
14.32
14.33
14.34
14.35
14.36
3 Requirements as to Amendments to Advertisements in Case a Supplement is Published
14.37
14.38
14.39
14.40
14.41
14.42
14.43
4 General Requirement to Align Information Concerning Offers of Securities
14.44
14.45
V Supervision of the Advertisement Regime—Risk of Conflicting Views of Authorities?
14.46
14.47
14.48
1 Procedure for the Cooperation between Competent Authorities
14.49
14.50
2 What is Next?
14.51
14.52
14.53
VI No Grandfathering
14.54
VII Conclusion
14.55
15 Omission of Information, Incorporation by Reference, Publication, and Language of the Prospectus
Preliminary Material
I Review of the Prospectus Directive and the Purpose of the Prospectus Regulation
15.01
15.02
15.03
15.04
II The Scope of the Prospectus and Different Types of ‘Omission’ of Material Information Allowed
15.05
15.06
15.07
III Incorporation by Reference
1 Incorporation by Reference under the Prospectus Directive: Prevalence of the Prospectus Directive Principles of Completeness, Accessibility, and Comprehensibility
15.08
15.09
15.10
15.11
15.12
15.13
2 Making the Incorporation by Reference Mechanism More Flexible and Assessing the Need for Supplements in Case of Parallel Disclosure of Inside Information
15.14
15.15
15.16
15.17
15.18
15.19
15.20
15.21
15.22
15.23
15.24
15.25
15.26
3 Incorporation by Reference under Article 19, Prospectus Regulation
15.27
15.28
15.29
15.30
15.31
15.32
15.33
15.34
15.35
15.36
15.37
15.38
15.39
15.40
15.41
15.42
15.43
15.44
15.45
4 Incorporation by Reference and ‘Draw-Down’ Prospectus
15.46
15.47
15.48
15.49
IV Omission of Information
1 Overview: Article 18, NPR
15.50
15.51
15.52
15.53
15.54
2 Omission of Information—Offer Price, Yield, Amount of the Securities (Art. 17, NPR)
15.55
15.56
15.57
15.58
15.59
15.60
V Publication of the Prospectus (Art. 21, NPR)
15.61
15.62
15.63
15.64
15.65
15.66
15.67
15.68
15.69
VI Language (Art. 27, NPR)
15.70
15.71
15.72
15.73
15.74
15.75
15.76
15.77
15.78
15.79
15.80
15.81
16 The Approval of Prospectus: Competent Authorities, Notifications, and Sanctions
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
16.01
16.02
16.03
II Prospectus Approval and the Role of National Competent Authorities
16.04
16.05
16.06
16.07
16.08
16.09
1 The Transfer of Approval of the Prospectus
16.10
16.11
16.12
16.13
16.14
16.15
16.16
16.17
16.18
16.19
2 Prospectus Approval: Definitions
16.20
16.21
16.22
3 The Scrutiny
16.23
16.24
16.25
16.26
(i) Completeness
16.27
16.28
(ii) Consistency
16.29
(iii) Comprehensibility
16.30
16.31
16.32
16.33
16.34
(iv) Stocktaking
16.35
16.36
16.37
16.38
4 Timing and Procedure of Prospectus Approval
16.39
16.40
16.41
16.42
16.43
16.44
16.45
16.46
III Geographical Validity of Prospectus
16.47
16.48
16.49
16.50
16.51
16.52
16.53
IV Linguistic Regime
16.54
16.55
16.56
16.57
16.58
16.59
16.60
16.61
16.62
16.63
16.64
16.65
V Sanctioning Regime
16.66
1 Criminal and Administrative Sanctions
16.67
16.68
16.69
16.70
16.71
2 The Menu of Sanctions and the Due Process
16.72
16.73
16.74
16.75
3 Publication of Decisions
16.76
16.77
16.78
16.79
16.80
16.81
16.82
16.83
16.84
VI Remaining Spaces for Arbitrage in the Prospectus Regime
16.85
16.86
16.87
16.88
16.89
VII Identifying the National Competent Authority
16.90
16.91
16.92
16.93
16.94
16.95
16.96
VIII A Focus on Equity Securities
16.97
1 Tying Prospectus Regime to Company Law
16.98
16.99
16.100
16.101
2 Regulatory Arbitrage Techniques in Equity Markets
16.102
16.103
16.104
16.105
16.106
16.107
16.108
16.109
3 Alternative Connecting Factors
16.110
16.111
16.112
16.113
16.114
IX Competition versus Centralization: A Trade-Off?
16.115
16.116
16.117
16.118
16.119
16.120
16.121
16.122
16.123
X Conclusion
16.124
16.125
17 The Prospectus Regime and Brexit
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
17.01
17.02
17.03
17.04
II Brexit and Listing—The UK Position
17.05
17.06
III How Will Transition Work?
17.07
17.08
17.09
17.10
17.11
IV Enacting Transition
17.12
17.13
17.14
17.15
17.16
17.17
17.18
17.19
17.20
17.21
17.22
V Listing Documents and Prospectuses
17.23
17.24
17.25
17.26
VI When is a Prospectus Required?
17.27
VII A Security
17.28
VIII Public Offer
17.29
17.30
17.31
17.32
IX Listing Particulars
17.33
17.34
17.35
X Home Member State
17.36
17.37
XI Reoffers and Cascades
17.38
17.39
17.40
17.41
17.42
XII Offer Document Content
17.43
17.44
17.45
1 The Summary
17.46
17.47
2 The Base Prospectus
17.48
17.49
17.50
17.51
XIII Language
17.52
XIV Conclusion
17.53
Part III Prospectus Liability and Litigation
18 The Influence of the EU Prospectus Rules on Private Law
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
18.01
18.02
II Prospectus Regulation and Civil Liability
1 Liability of the Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
(i) General
18.03
18.04
18.05
(ii) Does responsibility rest with the issuer or with the administrative, supervisory, or management body?
18.06
(iii) Offeror of the securities
18.07
(iv) Person asking for admission to trading on a regulated market
18.08
18.09
18.10
18.11
(v) Guarantor
18.12
(vi) Minimum harmonization
18.13
(vii) Provisions of national law governing civil liability
18.14
2 Liability for the Summary
18.15
18.16
18.17
III Information Obligations under the EU Prospectus Rules
1 The Basic Principle
18.18
18.19
18.20
18.21
2 Elaboration of the Basic Principle
18.22
18.23
3 Risk Factors
18.24
4 Summary
18.25
18.26
18.27
IV Unlawfulness and Imputability
1 May Civil Courts be More Flexible than the EU Prospectus Rules?
(i) General
18.28
(ii) European principle of effectiveness
18.29
18.30
18.31
18.32
(iii) Materiality criterion?
18.33
18.34
18.35
(iv) Grounds of justification
18.36
(v) Soft law
18.37
(vi) Imputability
18.38
18.39
18.40
18.41
2 May Civil Courts be Stricter than the EU Prospectus Rules?
(i) Immofinanz and Genil v Bankinter
18.42
18.43
(ii) Nationale-Nederlanden v Van Leeuwen
(a) Legal framework
18.44
18.45
18.46
18.47
18.48
(b) Questions referred for a preliminary ruling
18.49
(c) Duties to furnish additional information on the basis of reasonableness and fairness?
18.50
18.51
18.52
(iii) Consequences of Nationale-Nederlanden v Van Leeuwen
18.53
18.54
18.55
(iv) Article 6(1), Prospectus Regulation and Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980
18.56
18.57
(v) The operation of the prospectus as a European passport
18.58
(vi) Example 1
18.59
(vii) Example 2
18.60
(viii) Securities not covered by the Annexes to Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/980
18.61
(ix) Investor protection and a European capital market
18.62
(x) Differentiation between retail and wholesale investors?
18.63
18.64
(xi) Use of language
18.65
18.66
(xii) Inclusion of non-material information
18.67
V The Influence of the EU Prospectus Rules on the Relativity Requirement
18.68
18.69
18.70
VI The Influence of the EU Prospectus Rules on the Proof of Causal Link
18.71
18.72
18.73
18.74
18.75
VII The Influence of the EU Prospectus Rules on Determination of the Extent of the Loss or Damage
18.76
18.77
18.78
18.79
VIII The Influence of the EU Prospectus Rules on a Limitation or Exclusion of Liability
18.80
IX Assessment by National Courts of their own Motion of Compliance with the EU Prospectus Rules in Cases Involving Private Investors
18.81
18.82
X The EU Prospectus Rules and Liability of Financial Regulators
1 Assessment by the Regulator
18.83
18.84
2 Italy
18.85
3 Nikolay Kantarev v Balgarska Narodna Banka
18.86
4 Article 20(9), Prospectus Regulation
18.87
18.88
XI Conclusion
18.89
19 Prospectus Liability: Competent Courts of Jurisdiction and Applicable Law
Preliminary Material
I Why do Jurisdiction and Applicable Law Matter? An Introduction
19.01
19.02
19.03
19.04
19.05
19.06
19.07
19.08
19.09
II The Default Jurisdictional Regime for Prospectus Liability
19.10
1 Cross-Border Prospectus Liability and the Brussels I-bis Regime
19.11
19.12
19.13
19.14
19.15
19.16
19.17
2 An Overview of the European Court of Justice Case Law
19.18
19.19
19.20
19.21
19.22
19.23
19.24
19.25
19.26
19.27
19.28
19.29
III The Default Regime on Applicable Law for Prospectus Liability
19.30
19.31
19.32
19.33
19.34
19.35
19.36
19.37
19.38
IV Taking Stock of Default Rules: A System in Need of Reform
19.39
19.40
19.41
19.42
19.43
19.44
19.45
19.46
19.47
19.48
19.49
V Deviating from Default Rules: The Issuer Choice Regime
19.50
19.51
1 Jurisdictional Agreements in Securities Litigation
19.52
19.53
19.54
19.55
19.56
19.57
19.58
19.59
19.60
2 Remaining Issues in Issuer Choice Regime
19.61
19.62
19.63
19.64
19.65
VI Conclusion
19.66
20 Germany
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
20.01
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
1 Historical Development of the Regulation of Prospectus Liability
20.02
20.03
20.04
2 The Legal Nature of Prospectus Liability
20.05
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
20.06
1 Statutory Prospectus Liability
20.07
20.08
20.09
2 Civil Law Prospectus Liability
20.10
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
20.11
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
20.12
1 Persons Assuming Responsibility for a Defective Prospectus (Section 21, Subs. 1, Sent. 1, No. 1, Securities Prospectus Act)
20.13
(i) Issuer
20.14
(ii) Offeror
20.15
(iii) Issuing consortium
20.16
(iv) External experts
20.17
(a) Historical information
20.18
(b) Profit forecasts and estimates
20.19
(c) General liability for external experts in the case of mandatory prospectus information?
20.20
(v) BaFin and stock exchange management
20.21
2 Persons Initiating the Issuance of the Defective Prospectus (Section 21, Subs. 1, Sent. 1, No. 2, Securities Prospectus Act)
20.22
20.23
20.24
20.25
3 Failure to Publish a Prospectus
20.26
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
1 Purchasers of Securities
20.27
2 Limitation to Purchases within the Six Months after the Public Offering
20.28
3 Requirement of a Genuine Link to Germany
20.29
4 No Relevance of the Level of Sophistication of the Purchasers
20.30
(i) No application of Directive 2006/114/EC (former Directive (84/450) on misleading advertising)
20.31
(ii) No application of Directive 2005/29 (unfair commercial practices)
20.32
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
20.33
1 Standard of an Average Investor
20.34
20.35
20.36
2 Incorrect or Incomplete Information
20.37
3 Materiality of the Information to the Assessment by an Average Investor
20.38
4 Failure to Update Information in the Prospectus
20.39
5 Failure to Publish a Prospectus
20.40
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
20.41
1 Fault of the Issuer
20.42
2 Fault of the Offeror
20.43
3 The Issuing Consortium
20.44
4 Failure to Publish a Prospectus
20.45
IX Causation and Damages
20.46
1 Causation
20.47
(i) Securities were not acquired on the basis of the prospectus
20.48
20.49
20.50
(ii) Incorrect or incomplete information did not contribute to a reduction in the exchange price of the securities
20.51
2 Damages
20.52
(i) Purchaser is still the holder of the securities
20.53
20.54
20.55
(ii) Purchaser is no longer the holder of the securities
20.56
20.57
3 Absence of Causation
20.58
(i) Awareness of the incorrectness or incompleteness of the information in the prospectus at the time of the purchase
20.59
(ii) Correction of the incorrect or incomplete information before the purchase
20.60
(iii) Claims solely based on the information contained in the summary or a translation
20.61
X Evidence
20.62
XI Disclaimers
20.63
XII Prospectus Summary
20.64
XIII Directors’ Liability
20.65
XIV Annex—Sections 21–5, German Securities Prospectus Act (Wertpapierprospektgestz—WpPG)
1 Section 21, Liability for an Incorrect Listing Prospectus
2 Section 22, Liability for Other Incorrect Prospectuses
3 Section 23, Exclusion of Liability
4 Section 24, Liability for Failure to Publish a Prospectus
5 Section 25, Invalid Limitation of Liability: Other Claims
21 France
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
21.01
21.02
21.03
21.04
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
21.05
21.06
21.07
21.08
21.09
21.10
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
21.11
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
21.12
21.13
21.14
21.15
21.16
21.17
21.18
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
21.19
21.20
21.21
21.22
21.23
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
21.24
21.25
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
21.26
21.27
21.28
21.29
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
21.30
21.31
21.32
IX Causation and Damages
21.33
21.34
21.35
21.36
21.37
X Evidence
21.38
XI Disclaimers
21.39
21.40
21.41
XII Prospectus Summary
21.42
XIII Directors’ Liability
21.43
22 Italy
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
22.01
22.02
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
22.03
22.04
22.05
22.06
22.07
22.08
22.09
22.10
22.11
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
22.12
22.13
22.14
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
22.15
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
22.16
22.17
22.18
22.19
22.20
22.21
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
22.22
22.23
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
22.24
22.25
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
22.26
IX Causation and Damages
22.27
22.28
22.29
22.30
22.31
22.32
X Evidence
22.33
XI Disclaimers
22.34
XII Prospectus Summary
22.35
XIII Directors’ Liability
22.36
22.37
23 Spain
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
23.01
23.02
23.03
23.04
23.05
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
1 Statutory Provisions on Prospectus Liability
23.06
23.07
23.08
23.09
2 The Nature of Prospectus Liability
23.10
23.11
23.12
23.13
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
23.14
23.15
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
23.16
23.17
23.18
23.19
23.20
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
1 The Issuer of the Securities
23.21
23.22
2 The Seller of the Securities
23.23
23.24
3 The Person Seeking Admission to Listing of the Securities
23.25
4 The Directors of the Issuer, the Seller of the Securities, or the Person Seeking Admission to Listing
23.26
5 The Guarantor of the Securities
23.27
23.28
6 The Lead Managers of the Placement of the Securities
23.29
23.30
23.31
23.32
7 The Persons Accepting Liability on the Prospectus or any Portion Thereof
23.33
23.34
8 The Persons Who Have Authorized the Prospectus
23.35
9 Identification of Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
23.36
10 Joint and Several Nature of the Liability of the Parties Responsible for the Content of the Prospectus
23.37
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
23.38
23.39
23.40
23.41
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
23.42
23.43
23.44
23.45
23.46
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
23.47
23.48
23.49
IX Causation and Damages
23.50
23.51
X Evidence
23.52
23.53
XI Disclaimers
23.54
23.55
XII Prospectus Summary
23.56
23.57
XIII Directors’ Liability
23.58
23.59
23.60
23.61
24 The Netherlands
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
24.01
24.02
24.03
24.04
24.05
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
24.06
24.07
24.08
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
24.09
24.10
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
24.11
24.12
24.13
24.14
24.15
24.16
24.17
24.18
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
24.19
24.20
1 The Issuer
24.21
2 The Lead Manager
24.22
3 The Co-Managers
24.23
4 The Selling Shareholder
24.24
5 The Issuer’s Auditor
24.25
6 Joint and Several Liability?
24.26
24.27
24.28
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
24.29
24.30
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
24.31
24.32
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
24.33
IX Causation and Damages
24.34
24.35
X Evidence
24.36
XI Disclaimers
24.37
24.38
XII Prospectus Summary
24.39
XIII Directors’ Liability
24.40
24.41
25 Luxembourg
Preliminary Material
I Introduction
25.01
25.02
25.03
25.04
25.05
25.06
25.07
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
25.08
25.09
25.10
25.11
25.12
25.13
25.14
25.15
25.16
25.17
25.18
25.19
25.20
25.21
25.22
25.23
25.24
25.25
25.26
25.27
25.28
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
25.29
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
25.30
25.31
25.32
25.33
25.34
25.35
25.36
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
25.37
25.38
25.39
25.40
25.41
25.42
25.43
25.44
25.45
25.46
25.47
25.48
25.49
25.50
25.51
25.52
25.53
25.54
25.55
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
25.56
25.57
25.58
25.59
25.60
25.61
25.62
25.63
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
25.64
25.65
25.66
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
25.67
25.68
25.69
IX Causation and Damages
25.70
25.71
25.72
25.73
25.74
25.75
X Evidence
25.76
XI Disclaimers
25.77
XII Prospectus Summary
25.78
XIII Directors’ Liability
25.79
25.80
25.81
25.82
26 United Kingdom
Preliminary Material
I Introduction: The Prospectus Regulation and ‘Brexit’
26.01
26.02
26.03
26.04
26.05
1 The Scenarios
(i) Scenario (1): ‘no deal’
26.06
(ii) Scenario (2): a ‘withdrawal agreement’
26.07
(iii) Scenario (3): no Brexit
26.08
2 The Withdrawal Act
26.09
26.10
26.11
3 UK Financial Services Legislation
26.12
26.13
4 The Role of the Financial Services Authority/Financial Conduct Authority
26.14
II The Legal Basis for Prospectus Liability
1 An Historical Excursus
26.15
26.16
2 Civil Liability under the Prospectus Directive in the UK
26.17
26.18
26.19
26.20
3 Civil Liability under the Prospectus Regulation in the UK
26.21
4 The Tiers of Provisions
26.22
5 Statutory Rule-Making Powers
26.23
6 The Consultation Process
26.24
26.25
26.26
7 The Principal Changes from Directive to Prospectus
26.27
26.28
8 The New Financial Conduct Authority Rules
26.29
26.30
9 The Statutory Base
26.31
10 The Threshold Cause of Action
26.32
26.33
11 The Principal Provision: Section 90 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000
26.34
26.35
III Definition of ‘Prospectus’
26.36
IV Persons Responsible for the Prospectus
26.37
26.38
26.39
26.40
26.41
26.42
26.43
V Persons Liable for Misleading Prospectus Information
26.44
VI Persons Who Can Sue for Damages Caused by a Misleading Prospectus
26.45
26.46
26.47
VII Defectiveness of Prospectus Information
26.48
VIII Fault of the Party Who is Sued
26.49
26.50
IX Causation and Damages
1 Causation
26.51
2 Measure of Compensation
26.52
26.53
26.54
3 Other Forms of Liability
26.55
X Evidence
26.56
XI Disclaimers
26.57
XII Prospectus Summary
26.58
XIII Directors’ Liability
26.59
1 The Royal Bank of Scotland Rights Litigation
26.60
26.61
2 The Brexit Scenarios Revisited
(i) Scenarios (1): ‘no deal’
26.62
26.63
26.64
(ii) Scenario (2): a ‘withdrawal agreement’
26.65
26.66
26.67
26.68
(iii) Scenario (3): no Brexit
26.69
3 The Future UK Financial Regulatory Framework
26.70
Further Material
Index
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Table of Cases
Edited By: Danny Busch, Guido Ferrarini, Jan Paul Franx
From:
Prospectus Regulation and Prospectus Liability
Edited By: Danny Busch, Guido Ferrarini, Jan Paul Franx
Content type:
Book content
Product:
Financial Law [FBL]
Series:
Oxford EU Financial Regulation
Published in print:
20 March 2020
ISBN:
9780198846529
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